Brass Dragon Inn
Another of the many dragon-named establishments in the city is the Brass Dragon Inn, a huge, one-story building with a rambling interior filled with kitchens, taprooms, dining halls, bars, bedrooms, short towers (up to three stories), fire-lit lounges and sitting rooms, and more. The food is not great and is also expensive, though few exhausted souls coming through the Highway Gate care very much; they are just happy to have a chance to rest.
Two families (the Yrinjes and the Solvanis) own the inn, constantly arguing over what to serve and how to manage the place. Customers expect to see the staff members fighting among themselves, and just ignore it. The head bartender here is an intelligent and skilled half-elf student nicknamed “Rainy.” He began work here a few months ago and is well-liked by everyone. Many hired bouncers protect the inn from vandals, thieves, arsonists, and drunken patrons’ pranks.
This grand-looking establishment is the first building many travelers see after long days on the River Road, anticipating the Free City’s hospitality. The sight is not disappointing. The inn is a rambling maze of wings, towers, sleeping and dining rooms, a kitchen, comfortable fire-lit lounges and smoky, noisy beer halls. In short , there is something for everyone.
But the prices charged are the highest in the Old City, with room and board costing in the neighborhood of 1 gp. And though the menu lists seafood and vegetable dishes, beef and chicken, and everything else, all the food seems to taste the same, which is not very good.
The inn employs a small group of bouncers to protect the premises against troublemakers and to enforce the collection of all weapons larger than daggers at the door.
Type
Inn
Parent Location
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